For example, I have yet to hear an intelligent explanation for the origins of the universal natural laws. Not the natural laws as we know them, no, I refer to the laws themselves. What originally determined that water turns into ice crystals when it freezes to become less dense than liquid water? What originally determined that objects in motion tend to remain in motion unless acted upon by force? What originally determined that hot objects radiate light? I do not see how the physical laws that govern the universe (again, NOT our understanding of the laws, the laws themselves) could have somehow written themselves.
Ok, see, that's not evidence of any kind. That's saying, "It could have happened some other way, so obviously something made it happen this way!" Surely you see why that's not a valid argument. Not everything that happens is "made" to happen by any exterior will or higher power. The laws of the universe essentially boil down to "Here are some particles, here's how they interact." The properties of ice, the laws of momentum, black-body radiation, none of these are fundamental laws of the universe. They're just rules of thumb we use to deal with large-scale operations, in the same way that an accountant isn't going to personally going to count out 1 dollar bills to every department of a store.
You are, again, assuming that the light from the edge of the universe wasn't created in transit. For you information, according to the "science" that you hold above everything, the objects at the edge of the universe have travelled faster than the speed of light to get where they are since the start of the universe. Faster than the universal speed limit for matter and energy. Also, don't call people trolls when they're just, as you are, stating opinion.
Actually, no they DON'T need to have travelled faster than light. Here's the deal; we're not actually seeing the edge of the universe. We're seeing what WAS where we're looking, at the beginning of the universe. What was there was a cloud of ridiculously hot energy and matter. Now, just as an example, of something has moved to the OTHER side of the center of the universe from us, any distance at all, we can't see it, because to look that far away would involve looking further back in time than the beginning of the universe. Now, the actual geometry and physics of it is a good deal more complicated than that, but hopefully that illustrates the concept. I'm no physics major, so I don't have as good a grasp of it as I'd like. The short of it is, relativity is fucking complicated in all its implications, and you're not going to wrap your head around it without devoting a lot of time to pondering how things like simultaneity don't actually exist.